“The Seed of the Sacred Fig," film directed by Mohammad Rasoulof, 2025
This film was done in secret and its director is now in
exile in Germany. It is a parable about
the oppression of women, and many others, in Iranian society, but compressed
into the life of a single family. The
title supposedly comes from an Iranian saying about a fig vine that strangles other living
plants. In this case, the ‘seed’ of this
fig is clearly theocracy. The film has
its roots in the 2022 protests that started with the murder of Mahsa Amini by
the Morality Police over her hijab. The
film includes real footage of these protests as supposedly seen by the
principal characters, usually filmed on an iPhone.
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Fraught discussion at the dinner table |
The family is the father, Iman, who is promoted to a judgeship in
a ‘Revolutionary’ Court in Tehran. His
job is to sign death warrants and prison sentences given him by higher ups
without any investigation as to innocence or guilt, which bothers him. But he does it because it will come with a
higher salary and a bigger, better apartment.
He is also gifted a gun to defend himself. Iman, like is wife Najmeh,
are on board with the promotion, as they are very observant Muslims and believe
everything the government does is the ‘will of God’ – including the hijab
ban. Their two daughters, Rezvan and
Sana, are not so sure.
Iman unfortunately gets this job right at the start of the
protests, so he is in court all day and part of the night ‘processing’
protesters. The issue that begins to
break the family is a student friend of Rezvan gets sprayed in the eye by
buckshot while in her dorm or at a protest.
Najmeh supports the police actions, but also nurses this girl in secret
because her daughter brings her to the apartment. The parents want the girl out of the
apartment and she is later arrested.
Both Iman and Najmeh warn the children not to back the protests or go
out in the streets. We hear chants of “Death
to the Theocracy” and “Women, Life,
Freedom” under their windows and later see women waving headscarves in the
air.
Rezvan argues with her parents about the protests and
feminism and somehow Iman’s gun disappears from his drawer too. He is intensely suspicious of his daughters
and sends them to a police interrogator over the gun. His name and address is then
posted on the internet as a criminal judge and the family flees to a run-down
town in the hills. From here the film
becomes a horror story, as the girls and later the mother fear Iman’s rage, as
he is given another gun. He locks them
up in rooms as ‘liars’ as they try to protect each other. The first gun appears – hidden by little
sister Sana - who escapes, then frees the others. Iman chases the three of them around the
shabby ruins with his gun until he corners Sana and falls through a crumbling roof
to his death.
This is a parable of how a family dominated by a religious,
state-tied father is similar to the whole of Iranian society run by a council
of violent male mullahs and a ‘Supreme” Leader.
Women play the role of a key revolutionary contingent in this battle.
For the geo-political pod-casters and liberal cultural
relativists, Iran and the hijab are heroic examples of the ‘battle against
imperialism.’ And indeed Iran has been
subject to war and invasion from Iraq, endless U.S. sanctions, threats,
bombings by Israel, dropped nuclear treaties, a U.S. backed Pahlavi
dictatorship and more. Yet it is not the
U.S. that will liberate the Iranian people from theocratic capitalism, it will
be the Iranian working class, peasants and minorities who will do it, in
alliance with others in the region. ‘Anti-imperialists’ who support theocracy by
opposing popular internal movements against U.S. ‘enemies’ are actually real enemies
of the working class in the Middle East. This film is an excellent historical
and social document of that struggle.
Prior blogspot reviews on this subject, use blog search
box, upper left, to investigate our 19 year archive, using these terms: “Iran,”
“feminism.”
Kultur Kommissar / March 11, 2025
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